Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
412909 tn?1211069559

Multicolor pixelations in both eyes

Hello,i'm asking if anyone may know about what is happening to my eyes?
I'm a 38 yo female and over the last 2 years when i have PMS my eyes get this multicolor pixelation
in both eyes,[i don't know the terminology but thats my way of describing it].
Kind of like, if you spray water on a Tv screen when you turn it on,that's what's happening and
because of this i have trouble looking at anything directly because i't blanks out whatever i'm
looking at.It only occurs at PMS.
I want to find info on this but i haven't a clue where to start,if i type anything about color on the pc
i pretty much get a lot of color blindness results and that i am not.

Any info would be appreciated.             Thanks   Ozangelique
2 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
233488 tn?1310693103
MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL
In a situation like yours the great number of these problems are forms of ocular or eye or ophthalmic migraine (often do not have headaches) these are often hormonally driven.

Use the search, topics and archive features to look up the extended discussions of ophthalmic migraine.

See an Eye MD for a baseline eye exam. Find one at www.aao.org

JCH IIII MD
Helpful - 1
412909 tn?1211069559
Thank you so much. I've now been researching ophthalmic migraine and it sounds like me, i now have a beginning thanks to you .

Ozangelique.
Helpful - 0

You are reading content posted in the Eye Care Forum

Popular Resources
Find out how beta-blocker eye drops show promising results for acute migraine relief.
Eye whitening, iris color change, and eyeball "bling." Eye expert Dr. John Hagan warns of the dangers from these unnecessary surgeries.
Eye expert John Hagan, MD, FACS, FAAO discusses factors to consider and discuss with your eye care team before embarking on cataract surgery.
Is treating glaucoma with marijuana all hype, or can hemp actually help?
Protect against the leading cause of blindness in older adults
Got dry eyes? Eye drops aren't the only option! Ophthalmologist John C. Hagan III, MD explains other possible treatments.